Log in to add to your wishlist
"What other MC do you know who's as well versed in Modest Mouse as he is in MF Doom? Astronautalis' rhymes are brilliant." - AP (Also, the packaging was designed by Astronautalis. Included is a polaroid per song with the lyrics on the back.)
Genre:
Hip-Hop/Rap: Alternative Hip Hop
Release Date:
2006
The Mighty Ocean & Nine Dark Theaters
Astronautalis
© Copyright-Fighting Records
(790168539121)
Record Label: Fighting Records
| Preview |
Song Name |
Time |
Buy |
|
|
1. Short Term Memory Loss |
5:03 |
Album Only
|
|
|
2. Meet Me Here Later |
3:38 |
Album Only
|
|
|
3. Seaweed Sheets |
4:48 |
Album Only
|
|
|
4. Lost At Sea (Part 1: That Old Sinking Feeling) |
1:59 |
Album Only
|
|
|
5. Lost At Sea (Part 2: The Getaway) |
3:28 |
Album Only
|
|
|
6. A Love Song for Gary Numan |
3:42 |
Album Only
|
|
|
7. Barrel Jumping (A Man of Letters) |
4:20 |
Album Only
|
|
|
8. Astigmatism |
3:21 |
Album Only
|
|
|
9. Skeleton (Everybody's Favorite) |
3:54 |
Album Only
|
|
|
10. My Dinner With Andy |
5:04 |
Album Only
|
|
|
11. Xmas In July |
3:54 |
Album Only
|
|
|
12. Down and Out In the Bold New City of the South |
10:39 |
Album Only
|
|
|
13. Meet Me Here Later |
2:38 |
Album Only
|
|
|
preview all songs |
|
|
No items available in your wishlist
Astronautalis debut album You and Yer Good Ideas did indeed shake a few good ideas out, but most were stuck under the album's lo-fi production, which left behind little more than the impression of a pair of Southern stoners messing around with bedroom tapes. Mighty Ocean and Nine Dark Theaters presents a far different aural vista, and thus this CD couldn't be further removed its predecessor. It doesn't, however, make categorizing Astronautalis any easier. Rap poet? Slacker soliloquist? C&W story spinner? Indie singer/songwriter? At some point or other, the artist falls into all these categories, sometimes simultaneously. The music further blurs the edges — hip-hop rhythms; ambient, synthesized soundscapes; gorgeous picked guitar that shift from iridescent indie to twangy country and on to shimmering pop. Most, but not all, of the pieces billow dreamily away, giving the album a diffuse, otherworldly feel where time slows or stops entirely. That atmosphere perfectly dovetails with Astronautalis lyrics/poems/raps, in which nothing much happens, no conclusions are really reached, and life, such as it is, seems utterly disconnected from the outside world. This isn't so much a slacker's paradise as a limbo-land, where the living ain't so easy, but whose sharp edges are smoothed over by alcohol, sex (often passing for love), and drugs. The denizens within all seem to be standing still or moving only in meaningless circles, with inconsequential events and emotions taking on oversized proportions, the past as unhappily recalled as the present, with few thoughts of the future, for tomorrow offers nothing more than today.
Unlike John Cougar Mellancamp and Bruce Springsteen's idyllic memories of small-town life, Astronautalis vividly etches its unseemly underbelly. With inescapable dead-ends and incredible insularity, this is a universe filled with unmoored lives oblivious to the world outside their own uncomfortable surroundings, and where even the flashes of teenaged exuberance are soon spent, as life floats on and on towards eternal nothingness. Small town, small lives, all played languorously out on a small stage will seem hauntingly familiar for some, horrifying for others, but in either case, it's a muted dystopia that won't soon be forgotten.
Read more...
Thanks for your review
Thanks for reviewing this album! You should see it show up on the album page in a few days.
[CLOSE]